Pakistani, Chinese firms to invest $12 million in fishmeal plant at Gwadar Port

This photo, taken on January 14, 2025, shows a generic view of a newly developing area (bottom) and the downtown area seen from a hilltop in Pakistan’s coastal city of Gwadar, Balochistan. (AP/File)
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Updated 09 September 2025
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Pakistani, Chinese firms to invest $12 million in fishmeal plant at Gwadar Port

  • Pakistan has set a seafood export target of $600 million for the 2025–26 financial year
  • The venture will source fish from Arabian Sea to produce feed-grade fishmeal in China

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s TECNO Group and Chinese MAYCOM Group will invest $12 million to establish a joint fishmeal processing plant at Gwadar Port in Pakistan’s Balochistan province, Pakistani state media reported on Tuesday.

The agreement for the joint venture was signed during Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s visit to Beijing last week, amid Islamabad’s efforts to boost seafood exports from the underdeveloped coastal regions in Pakistan.

Sharif’s six-day visit to China saw the signing of 21 memorandums of understanding and agreements worth $4.2 billion between the two countries to boost business-to-business cooperation across various sectors.

The fishmeal project will source sardines and other fresh fish from the Arabian Sea near Gwadar to produce feed-grade fishmeal and fish oil for aquaculture markets in southeastern China, the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) news agency reported.

“Under the partnership, TECNO will hold a controlling stake in the joint venture, which also includes the third-party company, CYCLON, and will oversee local resource procurement and production in Pakistan,” the report read.

A fishmeal processing plant converts raw fish and trimmings into protein-rich fishmeal and fish oil, mainly used in animal feed for poultry and farmed fish.

MAYCOM will provide technology and oversee sales operations for the two-phase project, with the first phase requiring an initial investment of $4 million to produce an output of 15,000 tons, according to APP.

Pakistan has set a seafood export target of $600 million for the 2025–26 financial year. The country’s fisheries sector generated $465 million in earnings during FY 2024–25, according to government data, with China remaining the largest buyer.

The two groups also signed a procurement deal for 10,000 tons of Pakistani sesame seeds. They agreed to export peanuts, cottonseed and mineral products from Pakistan to China in return for Chinese solar panels, energy storage systems and new energy products.


Pakistan expands pilgrim travel system for Iran, Iraq with licenses to 67 new operators

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Pakistan expands pilgrim travel system for Iran, Iraq with licenses to 67 new operators

  • New system requires all Iraq-Iran pilgrimages to be organized by licensed groups under state oversight
  • Long-running “Salar” model relied on informal caravan leaders, leading to overstays and missing pilgrims

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has issued registration certificates to 67 additional licensed pilgrimage companies, expanding a tightly regulated travel system designed to curb overstays, undocumented migration and security risks linked to religious travel to Iran and Iraq, the ministry of religious affairs said on Tuesday.

The move is part of a broader overhaul of Pakistan’s pilgrim management framework after authorities confirmed that tens of thousands of Pakistani pilgrims had overstayed or gone missing abroad over the past decade, raising concerns with host governments and triggering diplomatic pressure on Islamabad to tighten oversight.

“The dream of safe travel for pilgrims to Iran and Iraq through better facilities and a transparent mechanism is set to be realized,” the religious affairs ministry said in a statement, quoting Federal Minister for Religious Affairs Sardar Muhammad Yousaf, who announced that 67 new Ziyarat Group Organizers had been registered.

Pakistan’s government has dismantled the decades-old “Salar” system, under which informal caravan leaders arranged pilgrimages with limited state oversight. The model was blamed for weak documentation, poor accountability and widespread overstays, particularly during peak pilgrimage seasons. 

Under the new framework, only licensed companies are allowed to organize pilgrimages, and they are held directly responsible for ensuring pilgrims return within approved timelines.

Authorities say pilgrimages to Iran and Iraq will be conducted exclusively under the new system from January 2026, marking a full transition to regulated travel. The religion ministry said it has now completed registration of 24 operators in the first phase and 67 more in the second, with remaining applicants urged to complete documentation to obtain licenses.

The religious affairs ministry said a digital management system is being developed with the National Information Technology Board to monitor pilgrim movements and operator compliance, while a licensed ferry operator has also secured approval to explore future sea travel options.

The overhaul has been accompanied by tighter coordination with host countries. Earlier this month, Pakistan and Iraq agreed to share verified pilgrim data and restrict entry to travelers cleared under the new system, following talks between interior ministers in Islamabad and Baghdad. Pakistan has also barred overland pilgrim travel for major religious events, citing security risks in its southwestern Balochistan province, meaning travel to Iran and Iraq is now limited to approved air routes.

Officials say the reforms are aimed at balancing facilitation with accountability, as tens of thousands of Pakistani pilgrims travel annually to key Shia shrines, including Karbala and Najaf in Iraq and Mashhad and Qom in Iran. Travel peaks during religious occasions such as Arbaeen, when millions of worshippers converge on Iraq, placing heavy logistical and security demands on regional authorities.

The government says the new system is intended to restore confidence among host countries while ensuring safer, more transparent travel for Pakistani pilgrims.